Chapter 27 Exercises: 3, 4, 8, 31, 34, 41, 49

3. In a dress shop with only fluorescent lighting, a customer insists on taking dresses into the daylight at the doorway to check their color. Is she being reasonable? Explain.

4. Why will the leaves of a red rose be heated more than the petals when illuminated with red light? What does this have to do with people in the hot desert wearing white clothes?

8. Fire engines used to be red. Now many of them are yellow-green. Why the change?

31. Why can't we see stars in the daytime?

34. Can stars be seen from the moon in the “daytime” when the sun is shining?

41. Comment on the statement "Oh, that beautiul red sunset is just the leftover colors that weren't scattered on their way through the atmosphere."

49. Red sunrises occur for the same reason as red sunsets. But sunsets are usually more colorful than sunrises - especially near cities. what is your explanation?

Chapter 28 Exercises: 5, 8, 10, 21, 29, 31, 34, 39

5. Trucks often have signs on their backs that say; “If you can't see my mirrors, I can't see you.” Explain the physics here.

8. Car mirrors are uncoated on the front surface and silvered on the back surface. When the mirror is properly adjusted, light from behind reflects from the silvered surface into the driver's eyes. Good. But this is not so good at nighttime with the glare of headlights behind. This problem is solved by the wedge shape of the mirror (see sketch). When the mirror is tilted slightly upward to the “nighttime” position, glare is directed upward toward the ceiling, away from the driver's eyes. Yet the driver can still see cars behind in the mirror. Explain.

10 A person in a dark room looking through a window can clearly see a person outside in the daylight, whereas the person outside cannot see the person inside. Explain.

21. Why does reflected light from the sun or moon appear as a column in the body of water as shown? How would it appear if the water surface were perfectly smooth?

29. If while standing on a bank you wished to spear a fish out in front of you, would you aim above, below, or directly at the observed fish to make a direct hit? If instead you zapped the fish with a laser, would you aim above, below, or directly at the observed fish? Defend your answers.

31. When a fish in a pond looks upward at an angle of 45o, does it see the sky above the water's surface or a reflection from the water-air boundary of the bottom of the pond? Defend you answer.

34. What exactly are you seeing when you observe a "water-on-the-road" mirage?

39. How is a rainbow similar to the halo sometimes seen around the moon on a frosty night? How are rainbows and halos different?